Celebrated for its groundbreaking contributions to horror, sci-fi, and fantasy, Weird Tales magazine emerged in 1923 as a pivotal platform for emerging literary talent. It played a crucial role in discovering and showcasing the finest writers of its era, influencing the genre and captivating readers with its unique blend of imaginative storytelling.
Harry Houdini Reihenfolge der Bücher (Chronologisch)
Harry Houdini war ein ungarisch-amerikanischer Magier und Meister der Entfesselungskunst, der die Welt der Illusionen für immer veränderte. Er wurde berühmt für seine unglaublichen Entfesselungstricks und wurde zu einer Ikone seines Fachs. Neben seiner Zauberkunst war er auch als Skeptiker und Ermittler von Spiritisten bekannt. Sein Erbe lebt weiter und inspiriert Generationen von Künstlern und Zuschauern.




The Right Way To Do Wrong: An Exposé Of Successful Criminals
- 104 Seiten
- 4 Lesestunden
The book holds significant value in literature, recognized by scholars and academicians for its contribution to knowledge. It is presented in its original print format, preserving any marks or annotations to maintain its authentic character. This approach ensures that the book remains a vital resource for future generations, emphasizing its enduring importance.
Miracle Mongers and Their Methods
- 164 Seiten
- 6 Lesestunden
"All wonder," said Samuel Johnson, "is the effect of novelty on ignorance." Yet we are so created that without something to wonder at we should find life scarcely worth living. That fact does not make ignorance bliss, or make it "folly to be wise." For the wisest man never gets beyond the reach of novelty, nor can ever make it his boast that there is nothing he is ignorant of; on the contrary, the wiser he becomes the more clearly he sees how much there is of which he remains in ignorance. The more he knows, the more he will find to wonder at. My professional life has been a constant record of disillusion, and many things that seem wonderful to most men are the everyday commonplaces of my business. But I have never been without some seeming marvel to pique my curiosity and challenge my investigation. In this book I have set down some of the stories of strange folk and unusual performers that I have gathered in many years of such research.
A Magician Among the Spirits
- 352 Seiten
- 13 Lesestunden
Harry Houdini and his exposure of the fraud spiritualist, spirit photography, spirit slate writing, ectoplasm, clairvoyance, and other quakery and cons perpetrated on the gullible, by the likes of the Boston Medium Margery, the Davenport Brothers, Annie Eva Fay, the Fox Sisters, Daniel Dunglas Home, Eusapia Pallandino, and other con artists of their ilk. The whole country got excited by Houdini's campaign against faking spiritualists. He careened through the country, offering money for spirit contacts he couldn't duplicate by admitted magical chicanery. It was a heyday not only for Houdini but for the spirit-callers and there was an equally famous protagonist who thought the spirits could indeed be contacted, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. A photo at the front records a meeting between Houdini and Doyle and Houdini gives Doyle his own chapter. There's an earlier chapter on Daniel Dunglas Home, the English engineer of spectacular paranormal effects. Houdini raises hell with spiritualists who were giving their (usually paying) clients a vision of heavens to come, and shares the methods used to practice "fake" and sensational spiritualism. Houdini was nothing if not unrelenting. As a taste of things to come, he ends his introduction with the "Up to the present time everything that I have investigated has been the result of deluded brains."